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The Works Cited and Consulted

 

 

 

 

Alexander, J. & Rhodes, J. (2014). Direct to video: Rewriting the literacy narrative. On                                    multimodality: New media in composition studies. Irvine, San Bernardino, CA:                                    Conference on College Composition and Communication of the NCTE

Bordwell, D. (1993). The cinema of Eisenstein, (2nd Ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP.

Bordwell, D. & Thompson K. (2010). Chapter 6: The relation of shot to shot: Editing. Film Art An                 Introduction, (9th Ed.). New York, NY: McGraw Hill Companies Inc.

Cook, S. (Summer2007). Our eyes, spinning like propellers: Wheel of life, curve of velocities and                Dziga Vertov’s “theory of the interval.” New Vertov Studies, 121, 79-91.                                                  http://www.jstor.org/stable/40368481.

Costanzo, W. V. (1984). Double Exposure: Composing through writing and film. Upper Montclair,              NJ: Boynton/Cook Publishers.

Deacon, A. (2001). A classical framework for a new visual renaissance: Bridging the divide                              between the written and the visual in computer-based composition. Issues in Writing,                    12(1), 1-6. MLA International Bibliography.

Delagrange, S.H. (Spring2009) Wunderkammer, Cornell, and the visual canon of arrangement,                   13(9), KAIROS,http://technorhetoric.net/13.2/topoi/delagrange/

DigiRhet.org. (Spring 2006). Teaching digital rhetoric: Community, critical engagement, and                           application. Pedagogy, 6(2), 231-259.

               https://muse-jhu-edu.libproxy.eku.edu/article/197069/pdf.

Duncum, P. (2004). Visual culture isn’t just visual: Multiliteracy, multimodality and meaning.                           Studies in Art Education, 45(3), 252-264. Education Full Text.

Eisenstein, S. (1977). Film form: Essays in film theory. San Diego, CA: Harcourt Brace and Co.                         (Original work published 1949).

Garoian, C. R. and Gaudelius, Y. M. (2004). The spectacle of visual culture. Studies in Art                                 Education, 45(4), 298-312. Education Full Text.

Grushka, K. (2010). Conceptualizing visual learning as an embodied and performative pedagogy                    for all classrooms. Encounters on Education, 11, 13-23, Education Full Text.

Hayles, N. K. (2001). Writing machines. Designed by A. Burdick. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.

Hasselriis, P. (1992). An exemplary textbook from the 70s: Sparke and McKowen's                                             "Montage." English Journal, 81(7), 93-95. ERIC.

Hocks, M. E. (2003). Understanding visual rhetoric in digital writing environments. College of                          Composition and Communication, 54(4), 629-656. DOI: 10.2307/3594188.

Krause, J. (2004). Design Basics Index. (1st ed.). Cincinnati, OH: HOW Design Books.

Kress, G. (2005). Gains and losses: New forms of texts, knowledge, and learning. Computers and              Composition, 22, 5-22. Doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2004.12.004.

--------- (2012, March 15). Why adopt a multimodal approach? [Video file]. Retrieved from   

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZ4rMVCWkQs

--------- (2012, March 15). How do we choose between a mode [Video file]. Retrieved from   

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZ4rMVCWkQs

Kumpf, E. P. (2000). Visual metadiscourse: Designing the considerate text.” Technical                                    Communication Quarterly, 9(4), 401-424. DOI: 10.1080/10572250009364707.

McCloud, S. (1993). In M. Martin (Ed.), Understanding comics: The invisible art. New York, NY:                    Harpercollins Publishers.

McLuhan, M. and Fiore, Q. (1967). Produced by J. Agel. The medium is the massage. Berkeley ,                    CA: Gingko Press Inc.

McLuhan, M. (2016). The medium and the message: Understanding the information world (the                  collected speeches of M. Mcluhan). Middletown, DE: Clearfield Group LLC.

Metros, S. E. (2008). The educator’s role in preparing visually literate learners. Theory Into                          Practice, 47(2), 102-109. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40071530.

Nitty Gritty Studios (2017, Jul 26). Eisenstein’s Methods of Montage Explained, Russian Montage                theory, video essay [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?                              v=rZ4rMVCWkQs

Palmeri, J. (2012). Remixing Composition: A History of Multi-Modal Writing Pedagogy.                                  Carbondale, IL: South Illinois UP.

Pearcy, M. (2015). The flying man: The power of visual media in social education. Journal of                         Education, 195(1), 39-46, Education Full Text.

 

Sealey-Morris, G. (2015). The rhetoric of the paneled page: Comics and composition pedagogy.                   Composition Studies, 43(1), 31-50. Academic Search Complete.

 

Sego, L.P. (1971). “Multi-Modal Textbooks.” College of Composition and Communication. National               Council of Teachers of English. 22(1), 54-57, doi:10.2307/356530

Shipka, Jody. (2011). Toward A Composition Made Whole, Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburg UP

Sparke, W. and McKowen, C. (1970). Montage: Investigations in language. (2nd Ed.) Toronto: The                 MacMillan Company.

Tulley, C. and Blair, K. (Fall 2009). Remediating the book review: Toward collaboration and                           multimodality across the english curriculum. Pedagogy, 9(3), 441-469.  https://muse-jhu-                 edu.libproxy.eku.edu/article/361538/pdf.

Wysocki, A. (1998) Monitoring order. 3(2), Michigan Technological University, Kairos,

              http://kairos.technorhetoric.net/3.2/features/wysocki/mOrder.html

*ALL DIGITAL IMAGES WERE PHOTOGRAPHED BY THE CREATOR (E.C. Smothers)*

*ALL IMAGES DEPICTED IN PRINT BELONG TO THE INDIVIDUAL AUTHORS/PUBLISHERS OF THE TEXTS INDICATED IN WORKS CITED*

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*THANKS FOR VIEWING!!!*

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